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Neck pain in Hong Kong: a telephone survey on consequences and health service utilization.

Spine
January 1, 1970
Thomas T W Chiu et al. (3 authors)
Journal ArticleRandomized Controlled TrialResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tHuman StudyClinical
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to investigate the prevalence and consequences of neck pain, including health service utilization patterns and perceived effectiveness of treatments like self-massage.

Results Summary

Self-massage was the most preferred mode of self-care (83.3%), but only 30.2% of users reported neck pain improvement by less than half. Physiotherapy was perceived as more effective, with 60% reporting complete pain relief.

Population

Adults in Hong Kong with neck pain.

Effective Dosage

Not specified

Duration

Not specified

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (7)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
Medical consultation
no change
health service utilization
neck pain subjects
-
was the majority
#1
Physiotherapy
no change
health service utilization
neck pain subjects
-
came second
#2
Self-massage
no change
mode of self-care
neck pain subjects
83.3%
was the most preferred
#3
Physiotherapy
no change
health service
respondents
-
was regarded as the most effective
#4
Physiotherapy
decrease
neck pain
respondents
60%
completely removed
#5
Self-massage
no change
self-care treatment
most people
-
chose to be the most effective
#6
Self-massage
decrease
neck pain
them
30.2%
had their neck pain improved by less than a half
#7
Abstract

STUDY DESIGN: A regionally representative telephone survey using a 2-stage randomization process. OBJECTIVE: (1) To investigate the prevalence and consequence of neck pain in terms of disability and rate of absenteeism from work. (2) To describe the health services utilization pattern of neck pain subjects and to analyse the factors associated with neck pain and health services utilization pattern. SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA: There has been a lack of reliable information on the health service utilization pattern of neck pain subjects, the consequences and the patient perceived effectiveness of neck pain management in Hong Kong and Asian countries. METHODS: Subjects were interviewed on the sociodemographic characteristics, occurrence and consequences of neck pain, and the health utilization pattern. A random sample of the respondents was re-interviewed 7 to 10 days after the initial interview, by an independent interviewer for the reliability check. RESULTS: A total of 4640 subjects were interviewed. The 12-month prevalence was 64.6% (95% CI: 63.2%-66.0%). About 38.0% of these patients suffered from moderate to severe pain. Moreover, 17.7% of these subjects had to limit their social activities and 19% had to limit their work. About 25% of those subjects had consulted medical or health practitioners. Medical consultation is the majority and physiotherapy came second. Self-massage was the most preferred (83.3%) mode of self-care. Physiotherapy was regarded as the most effective health service, with 60% of the respondents' neck pain completely removed. Although most people chose self-massage to be the most effective self-care treatment, only one-third (30.2%) of them had their neck pain improved by less than a half. CONCLUSION: Neck pain is highly prevalent with an increasing impact in Hong Kong. More than one-third of neck pain patients suffered from moderate to severe pain and around 20% of them had to limit their work. About 25% of neck pain patient have consulted medical or health professionals. Physiotherapy and private medical clinic were the 2 service providers with high percentage of perceived complete improvement. There was a general trend that more neck pain patients used complementary therapies.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
AbsenteeismAdolescentAdultAgedAsian PeopleCommunity Health ServicesFemaleHealth StatusHealth SurveysHong KongHumansInterviews as TopicMaleMiddle AgedNeck PainPatient Acceptance of Health CareReferral and ConsultationYoung Adult
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy30/10
Quality65/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations12
Citations/Year0.8
Relative Citation Ratio0.57
NIH Percentile31.1%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.50
Weight Score1.48
Normalized Score0.45
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